These are amazing photos, Isabel. Any single one of them would be arresting. The collection is breathtaking. By calling them “photogenic” you place the qualities that amaze within the structures. I think the “genic” refers to the genius of the photographer in the framing of those qualities for the viewer.

ACH! I remember it well. Some 30+ years ago, we went to the Edinburgh Castle. Parked our car on the street nearby. When we returned, a parking attendant was dumping money from the meters. I asked him for directions to St. Andrews. I didn’t understand a word from his reply except for “Firth of Forth.” I asked him to repeat what he said. Same result. So we took the Forth Bridge and somehow made it to St. Andrews.
Tom

I had not realized that the Firth of Forth bridges had such esthetic beauty. All I knew of them was that the old bridge, the first bridge, became a synonym in my mother’s generation for endless tasks. It took three years for a painting crew to work their way across the bridge, and when they got to the end, it was time for them to go back to the beginning and start again. I suppose they could have used the legend of Sysiphus, but they used the Firth of Forth.
Jim T